AliveinChrist,
I had commented to Marcia in an earlier post that "Others of us (who once believed as you do) have searched the scriptures many times and
have seen that view ("water baptism for salvation") supported."
I went on to say: "
It's also the consistent view of the Church up until the Reformation [when Zwingli defended the 'outward symbol only' view]."
To which you responded...
Alive in Christ said:
Care to back up that assertion with counter examples, from the first 1500 year of the Church, of
anyone who held to the view that water baptism was only an outward 'symbol' that is chronologically disconnected from an inner regeneration that had already occured?
In the scriptures we find justification by faith alone, and water baptism being symbolic.
In the Scripture,
properly interpreted, we find
neither "justification by faith
alone" (which is flatly
contradicted by James 2:24, for starters)
nor "water baptism being 'symbolic' (in the sense of being a sign disconnected from a reality which has already taken place)".
And all through the centuries there have been believers who believed that.
Anyone can make such an assertion, but where is your documentation that this was in fact the case? Without actual
evidence your assertion is just wishful thinking--sorta' like the Mormons' assertions that
theirs are the "true teachings of Christ" that vanished (without leaving a trace of evidence) shortly after the Apostles left the scene.
The fact that there was false teaching also during those centuries does not make the false teaching...magically true.
And we do have actual evidence of false teachers such as Gnostics, Ebionites, Marcionites, Sabellians, Arians, etc.
What we
don't have is any evidence that there were any Christians who believed in "outward-'symbolic'-only" view of baptism. On the other hand, we have plenty of evidence that the Church taught (from the begining) that one is normally regenerated in the waters of baptism (and BTW, there is no hint of the view that the water in John 3:5 is amniotic fluid :smilewinkgrin
I'll await your evidence.
Even during times when the false was the majority view, that still does not make the view true.
The problem is that the
evidence suggests the what
you say was "false" was actually the
only view held in the Church. There is no documentary evidence to my knowledge of any Christians propounding the "outward-symbol-only" view, nor any evidence of even a debate on the issue.
*Contrast this with the ancient heresies in which there is both documentary evidence from the heretics themselves and the polemic counter-arguments from the Church defending orthodox teaching and acknowledigng the existence of these actual heresies. Even when we don't have extant writings of certain specific heretics, we often do have evidence there heresies existed based on the apologetic/polemical writings of the orthodox Christians--
not so with any
alleged "outward-symbol-only" view of water baptism.
To the scriptures, to the scriptures, to the scriptures.
Yes, "to the scriptures". However it does no good to go "to the scriptures, to the scriptures, to the scriptures" if one
misinterprets, misinterprets, misinterprets these same scriptures. (The Apostle Peter actually warned against that kind of thing in his Second Epistle.) In the judgement of the historic Church, the advocates of the "outward-symbol-only" view of Baptism, as first propounded by Zwingli, are the ones misinterpreting Scriptures.
When we cast aside the scriptures for the false traditions of men we err greatly.
Indeed, which is certainly the case with the false traditions of men such as "justification by faith alone" and "water baptism is only an outward symbol (with no real connection to the inner regeneration)"